I have a picture of Golden Ridge School 656
Section 21 Township 14 Range 4 W - 2nd Meridian near Inchkeith / Hawthorne / Fitzmaurice
It was my dads school
The family was Tillotson they immigrated from England in 1903 Richard & Alice and 5 children
His name was Harry Fletcher Tillotson.

Local history / family biography books:
Title Peace and strife : some facets of the history of an early prairie community / Martin L. Kovacs
Author Kovacs, Martin Louis, 1918-
Published Kipling, Sask. : Kipling District Historical Society, 1980
Other Auth Kipling District Historical Society
ISBN 0969023707

Title Pioneers and progress : Kipling and district, 1882-1998
Published Kipling, SK : Kipling & District History Book Committee, c1998
ISBN 1550563394

Title Saskatchewan looking backward : from its 75th anniversary, 1980-- founded 1905 : the meditations and observations of a son of a pioneer / written and compiled by D.A. (Alex) Cunningham
Author Cunningham, D. Alex
Published [Kipling, Sask.] : D.A. Cunningham, 1979

Title Bekevar, working papers on a Canadian prairie community / Robert Blumstock, editor
Published Ottawa : National Museums of Canada, 1979
Series Mercury series
Paper (Canadian Centre for Folk Culture Studies), 0316-1897 ; no. 31

Nearby placenames:Inchkeith was located at SE 1/4 Sec.15, Twp.13, R.4, W2 and established in 1927-12-01. Inchkeith is visible on the June 1941 Waghorn's Guide: Post Offices in Man, Sask, Alta, & West Ontario, however before this date, the location on the Regina (SK)- Brandon (MB) Canadian National Rail branchline between Langbank on the east, and Kipling to the west was Hawthorne.

According to editor E.T. Russell in the book "What's In A Name? Traveling through Saskatchewan with the story behind over 1600 Saskatchewan placenames", and Bill Barry's book "Geographic Names of Saskatchewan", Inchkeith was originally a CNR siding named Hawthorn for about two decades. Hawthorne / Hawthorn had as its namesake the author Nathaniel Hawthorne. However, when the application was went in for a post office for Hawthorne, the name was rejected as there was already established a post office of Hawthorn, so the pioneers re-named their settlement to Inchkeith, honouring an early Scottish settler and a rock at the mouth of the river designated as Inchkeith Rock.

Bender was also located in the section at 13-4-W2 on the above maps.
Crystal Spring post office was originally established at Sec.14, Twp.13, R.5, W2 and at the date of 1904-04-01.
Crystal Springs Post office chagned names to Bender in 1907-02-01 and was then established at Sec.7, Twp.13, R.4, W2.Fitzmaurice, North West Territories post office was established at Sec.4, Twp.14, R.4, W2 in 1895-04-01 and the post office closed in 1919-04-12, however the settlement placename remained on some later maps.